The Daily Stoic - The Best Stuff Is An Accidental Byproduct
Episode Date: November 30, 2022In Meditations, Marcus Aurelius marvels at “nature’s inadvertence.” A baker, he writes, makes the dough, kneads it and then puts it in the oven. Then physics, then Nature takes over. �...�The way loaves of bread split open,” Marcus writes, “the ridges are just byproducts of the baking, and yet pleasing, somehow: they rouse our appetite without our knowing why.”Today is the last day you can order our premium leather-bound edition of Meditations to ensure holiday delivery!✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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The best stuff is an accidental byproduct.
In Meditations, Marcus Aurelius marbles at nature's inadvertence.
A baker he writes makes the dough needs it and puts it in the oven, then physics, then nature
takes over.
The way loaves of bread split open, he writes in meditations, the ridges are just byproducts
of the baking, and yet pleasing somehow they arouse our appetite without our knowing
why.
It's such a beautiful observation
about such a banal part of life,
something that only a poet could see.
So it's worth taking a moment to step back
and realize that that sentence,
that Marcus Aurelius' meditations is itself,
a kind of meta example of the same phenomenon,
a bit of natures in inverteence. Marcus really is his philosophy dictated that he
sit down that he think that he'd keep ideas in mind and read and
reread about them and talk about them with others and write about them.
And that's what he did day after day, year after year.
Not for us, not for publication, not to impress anyone or to make money,
and yet what emerged from that,
the accidental byproduct is one of the greatest works ever written, the very thing we are talking about
today. Many great artists have come to similar conclusions that the work that they publish, the
paintings that they do, the symphonies that they write, is a result of their daily routines, their practices.
The work isn't accidental byproduct.
And Victor Franco would talk about how strange and remarkable it was that man search for meaning
became such a success because he wrote it not to build up his reputation as an author.
And in fact, after the book had sold millions of copies, Franco shared the fundamental lesson
of that book.
He said, don't aim at success.
The more you aim at it and make it a target, the more you are going to miss it.
For success, like happiness cannot be pursued, it must ensue.
And it only does so as the unintended side effect of one's dedication.
Instead of chasing fame and success, focus on the process, on producing
your art, on getting better and better, do your work, follow the process, put the dough in
the oven. You can't be certain what comes out of the other side of it. That's what the
inadvertence is all about. Yet at the same time, you can be certain there will be something
pure and true and real there. Which is what meditations is. I have loved it so much.
Why it's changed my life so much.
Actually, today is the last day you can order our leather bound
edition in time for the holidays.
If you want to ensure a holiday delivery,
we designed it here in the US.
We produced it with this awesome printer out in the UK.
It's genuine labor, one of the best Bible manufacturers
in the United States worked on it.
Gold foil stamped cover, gilded edged pages.
We put in these cool illustrations.
It comes in a really beautiful, awesome box.
And I added in my personal biography of Marcus Relays from Lives of the Stoics on there.
You can check out all of this at dailystoic.com slash meditations.
It's been amazing to see all of you rushing out to order this book.
And if you want it for the holidays, grab it now while you still can dailystoke.com slash meditations.
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